Chatterbox, like every Microsoft employee, dreams of being Bill Gates. If only I could stand in Bill G.'s shoes for a day: The power! The wealth! The house!

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Sometimes dreams do come true. Chatterbox didn't stand in The Boss's shoes, but this week he did the next best thing. He wore Bill Gates' clothes.

Chatterbox's perverse relationship with Bill Gates' apparel began in early January, when he read a story in the Wall Street Journal claiming Gates is a South Korean fashion icon. According to Journal reporter Hae Won Choi, young businessmen are forsaking Korea's formal wardrobe for Gates casual: At Internet startups, the most ambitious young men are chucking Hugo Boss suits and Givenchy ties for "round, tortoiseshell eyeglasses, unpolished shoes, and wrinkle-free pants." A huge clothing company is designing Gatesian duds for the mass market. Choi speculated that Gates fashion had caught on because it epitomizes the freewheeling American way of doing business: Gateswear is "the clothing of liberation," posited one Korean "fashion researcher."

Chatterbox was skeptical of the Journal story. He thought it sounded a bit like the stories Stephen Glass fabricated for the New Republic. The details had a too-odd-to-be-true quality: Would fashion designers really gain inspiration from a bulletin-board montage of Gates photos? Chatterbox decided to check out the story by e-mailing the named companies and entrepreneurs and asking if it was for real.

Pause for a message to Cheil Industries, Microsoft lawyers, and Slate readers: Chatterbox's acceptance of the BeanPole gift does not in any way hint, signify, imply, insinuate, intimate, or suggest that Bill Gates, Microsoft Corporation, Slate.com, or Chatterbox himself endorses, approves of, or likes BeanPole clothing. Nor does acceptance of the gift in any way accept, acknowledge, avow, or recognize that Cheil Industries has any right whatsoever to exploit Bill Gates' name, image, likeness, or whatever. Got it?

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Chatterbox is no fashion maven, but he's familiar enough with Gates' duds. A quick survey of the BeanPole collection suggested that the Korean designers have indeed aped the Gates style. Bill G. does wear casual, button-down shirts and soft V-necks in solid colors, and khaki is a favorite fabric. (On the other hand, neither Bill Gates nor any other American has ever been seen wearing a logo quite as peculiar or prominent as BeanPole's. The logo, a tuxedoed man in a top hat riding an old-time bicycle, stands for "the American dream applied to Korean industry," Song Moon Young writes. BeanPole is so proud of this symbol, apparently, that it even placed it on the side pocket of the sports jacket.)

When the threads arrived, Chatterbox knew in his heart he should immediately forward them to Bill G. Chatterbox is a loyal employee. Chatterbox is not the kind of person who tries on other people's clothes. But Chatterbox couldn't help noting that he is just Gates' size. Chatterbox too wears little eyeglasses, V-necks, and soft-collar button-downs. What could be the harm?...

Chatterbox could not resist. He tentatively removed the blue button-down shirt from the tissue paper. He slipped it on. It fit. A feeling of power coursed through Chatterbox's veins.

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Chatterbox slid the khaki sports jacket over the shirt. A new sensation: In this outfit, I could eat Judge Jackson for lunch!

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Off with the jacket, on with the purple V-neck. The number ONE office suite! The number ONE operating system! The number ONE company!

Finally, the khaki casual jacket--just right for strolling the Microsoft campus on a brisk spring day: I can't bundle the browser into the operating system? So what!? I can bundle myself into this coat.

After 15 delightful minutes playing Gates, Chatterbox was overcome with shame and packed up the clothes. They will be shipped on to their rightful owner tomorrow. Note to Bill G.: Chatterbox is keeping the blue shirt, the only article of clothing that actually touched skin. But if you want, Chatterbox will dry-clean the shirt and send it, too.